It is the abbreviation for "common era." It has nothing to do with the Bible or any religion.
ce=this
Lisa!
To calculate the years between 400 BCE and 100 CE, you need to add the two time periods together. There are 400 years from 400 BCE to 1 BCE, and then 100 years from 1 CE to 100 CE. Therefore, the total is 400 + 100 = 500 years apart.
The first century CE began at the beginning of 1 CE and ended at the end of 100 CE. The first century BCE ended at the end of 1 BCE, and the second century CE began at the beginning of 101 CE. (Note that there is no year 0, so 1 BCE immediately precedes 1 CE.)
Chirstanity
jg;cyhc
The number 100 does not necessarily mean anything in the Bible. There is nothing that can be linked in the Bible to this number. Another View: Some who study biblical numerology would consider the number 10 to mean 'final completion.' When a number is either repeated in a sequence or is a multiple of 10, it commonly refers to intensity/finality.
The Bible was written over a period of 1400 to 1800 years by more than 40 different authors, between approx 1450 BCE and 100 CE, in several languages. We don't know who the early collectors of the books were.
Ce qui means 'that which' i think :)
200 years.
Nothing biblical. The last book of the Bible - Revelation - was said to be completed in circa 95-100 AD.